she could challenge US Champion Jennifer Stuczynski
Now she attend CAL University and still pole vaulting. All the best to her with her new found stardom and hopefully if she is strong enough she could challenge US Champion Jennifer Stuczynski and current world record holder Yelena Isinbayeba in very near future.
Well that what internet can do to anybody nowadays. It just started from a picture that is posted by someone on the Net and from there it become viral. Allison Stokke don't like they extra attention and I think she deserve some privacy.
During her high school days this pole vault girl kept breaking the national record. But never she thought that by breaking the record she would become instant celebrity.
As for the gross, pervy, fratty college guys at the University of California, they should be prepping their pick-up lines to use on her right about….now.
so many people will undoubtedly try and befriend her, take advantage of her and snap pictures of her (which will show up on the Internet within minutes).
Even if Nike did come to her, I don’t think she would accept, being that she hates the fact she’s more famous for being hot than an athlete at this point, and the company would more than likely try to bank on her looks and all of the media hubbub than anything else.
Her and her family have grown more and more uneasy with the unwanted attention, and her boyfriend’s douchebagginess has even come into question, thanks to all of her jealous male fans, who wish she’d do something with their poles instead. Ohhh, snap!
As we’ve all probably seen by now, the web introduced Allison to the non-athletic world, the media has stuck to her like glue, painting her the picture of a young, adolescent sex symbol, barely out of high school.
Allison Stokke‘s dream of becoming the world’s best pole vaulter seems to have been replaced by another dream: to be removed from the sexual spotlight that Internet bloggers have brightly shined on her over the course of the past few weeks.
Female pole vaulter Allison Stokke is doing well in school
Here we have Allison Stokke pole vaulting for Cal, and not her high school. Because it's a lot less weird when she's pole vaulting for Cal and not her high school. In my humble opinion, yes. But feel free to disagree.
The problem began to surface in 2004 when she began to receive messages from her friends that her photo had been seen on the Internet. She had 1,000 new messages on her social network site and a YouTube video of her being interviewed had been viewed 15,000 times.
Miss Stokke isn't just a pretty girl; she's a pretty girl who happens to be a tremendous athlete. She was the California pole vaulting champion and is on scholarship at the University of California.
Miss Stokke's picture was shoot during a high school track meet, where she was preparing to compete in the pole vault, and it was posted to a web site.